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Pawns of international finance and politics: Florentine sculptors at the court of Henry VIII
by
Sicca, Cinzia Maria
in
Baccio da Montelupo
/ Bandinelli
/ Bronzes
/ Business
/ Business structures
/ Emperors
/ Giovanni Cavalcanti
/ Giulio de' Medici
/ Henry VIII
/ Henry VIII, King of England (1491-1547)
/ International finance
/ Jacopo Sansovino
/ Merchants
/ patronage
/ Pierfrancesco de' Bardi
/ Politics
/ Renaissance art
/ Renaissance period
/ Sarcophagi
/ Sculptors
/ Sculpture
/ Tombs
/ Visual artists
2006
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Pawns of international finance and politics: Florentine sculptors at the court of Henry VIII
by
Sicca, Cinzia Maria
in
Baccio da Montelupo
/ Bandinelli
/ Bronzes
/ Business
/ Business structures
/ Emperors
/ Giovanni Cavalcanti
/ Giulio de' Medici
/ Henry VIII
/ Henry VIII, King of England (1491-1547)
/ International finance
/ Jacopo Sansovino
/ Merchants
/ patronage
/ Pierfrancesco de' Bardi
/ Politics
/ Renaissance art
/ Renaissance period
/ Sarcophagi
/ Sculptors
/ Sculpture
/ Tombs
/ Visual artists
2006
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Pawns of international finance and politics: Florentine sculptors at the court of Henry VIII
by
Sicca, Cinzia Maria
in
Baccio da Montelupo
/ Bandinelli
/ Bronzes
/ Business
/ Business structures
/ Emperors
/ Giovanni Cavalcanti
/ Giulio de' Medici
/ Henry VIII
/ Henry VIII, King of England (1491-1547)
/ International finance
/ Jacopo Sansovino
/ Merchants
/ patronage
/ Pierfrancesco de' Bardi
/ Politics
/ Renaissance art
/ Renaissance period
/ Sarcophagi
/ Sculptors
/ Sculpture
/ Tombs
/ Visual artists
2006
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Pawns of international finance and politics: Florentine sculptors at the court of Henry VIII
Journal Article
Pawns of international finance and politics: Florentine sculptors at the court of Henry VIII
2006
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Overview
The aim of this paper is to place the projected tomb of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon within a wider context of events that are specifically of a political and economic nature. The artists are at once pawns in the hands of diplomats and financiers motivated by their inner rationale, as well as actors in their own right, discovering in a somewhat tentative way that, though not entirely free from the system of patronage of either institutions or princely families, they could jostle for position on the international stage, relying almost entirely on their own enterprising skills. The episode of the tomb, far from being a footnote in the history of the competition between Michelangelo and Bandinelli, offers an unusual insight into the workings of Medici patronage at a very delicate time in the history of both Leo X and Cardinal Giulio de' Medici. The favour accorded to Baccio Bandinelli precluded, during Leo's lifetime, the possibility that any other sculptor would be offered even a chance of being a candidate for this commission. The death of the pontiff left the Cardinal not only in a political quandary but also in dire financial straits. Yet the support and loyalty of the English monarch were crucial to Giulio de' Medici's success in his own endeavours to ascend the papal throne and, perhaps more importantly, to preserve Medici control over Florence. The trusted members of the Medici entourage representing both Florence and the family's interests at the court of Henry VIII, prevented the tomb project from dying altogether. The involvement of Giovanni Cavalcanti and his business partners Pierfrancesco de' Bardi and Zanobi Girolami, as well as that of Giovanni Gaddi, was financial since each partner bought stakes in the models prepared by a number of artists, but at the same time aesthetic judgement had to be exercised by one if not all the investors in selecting the authors of the models sent to London in 1521–1523. This opened the way for sculptors who had previously suffered from Bandinelli's overbearing dominance: namely Baccio da Montelupo, and Jacopo Sansovino.
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